Comparative and phylogenetic analyses of plastid genomes of the medicinally important genus Alisma (Alismataceae)

Front Plant Sci. 2024 Aug 20:15:1415253. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2024.1415253. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Alisma L. is a medicinally important genus of aquatic and wetland plants consisting of c. 10 recognized species. However, largely due to polyploidy and limited taxon and gene sampling, the phylogenomic relationships of Alisma remain challenging. In this study, we sequenced 34 accessions of Alismataceae, including eight of the ten species of Alisma, one species of Echinodorus and one species of Luronium, to perform comparative analyses of plastid genomes and phylogenetic analyses. Comparative analysis of plastid genomes revealed high sequence similarity among species within the genus. Our study analyzed structural changes and variations in the plastomes of Alisma, including IR expansion or contraction, and gene duplication or loss. Phylogenetic results suggest that Alisma is monophyletic, and constitutes four groups: (1) A. lanceolatum and A. canaliculatum; (2) the North American clade of A. subcordatum and A. triviale; (3) A. wahlenbergii and A. gramineum; and (4) A. plantago-aquatica from Eurasia and northern Africa with the eastern Asian A. orientale nested within it. Hence the results challenge the recognition of A. orientale as a distinct species and raise the possibility of treating it as a synonym of the widespread A. plantago-aquatica. The well-known Alismatis Rhizoma (Zexie) in Chinese medicine was likely derived from the morphologically variable Alisma plantago-aquatica throughout its long history of cultivation in Asia. The plastome phylogenetic results also support the tetraploid A. lanceolatum as the likely maternal parent of the hexaploid eastern Asian A. canaliculatum.

Keywords: Alisma; medicinal plant; phylogenomics; plastid genome; structural variation.

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This study was funded by the Smithsonian Barcode Network, the China Scholarship Council under Grant (202008515111) and Project of Xinglin Scholar Program for Discipline Talents and Research Enhancement at Chengdu University of Traditional Chinese Medicine (XCZX2022006). AT was supported by a “Margarita Salas” postdoctoral grant funded by the Ministerio de Universidades of Spain and the European Union “NextGenerationEU” and a grant from the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History ADCS Core Grant Program (PI, JW).